Nurses to work alongside beat bobbies

A woman talking to a nurse in a clinic.

Published:18:30Friday 19 June 2015

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Mental health nurses will work alongside police officers as part of a scheme to help vulnerable people.

For the next two years, nine NHS mental health nurses will accompany officers across the county, who can make on-the-spot assessments and referrals, rather than vulnerable people being taken into police custody or to hospital.

With one in four incidents the police attend having some sort of related health issue, the scheme is aimed at reducing demand while ensuring people get the right assistance at the first point of contact.

In addition, from August, three more mental health nurses will also be working within the force control room where 999 calls are answered, monitoring calls and offering advice to those reporting mental health related matters.

Inspector Hassan Khan said: “Lancashire is very much on par with what is seen nationally - about a quarter of the calls that come in are classified by the operator as having a related mental health issue.

“But in reality it’s more than that - we can get to a job that hasn’t been flagged up and find out once we’re there that there are mental health issues.

“What has happened in the past is the person is transported to hospital - sometimes in handcuffs - and the officer has to stay with them, sometimes for hours. This new scheme will hopefully streamline this massively, will reduce the tension and will reduce the pressure on us and the NHS.We don’t want to treat people with mental health problems as criminals.” It is hoped vulnerable people can now be referred to GPs and crisis teams at an earlier stage.